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Non-Tech : Binary Hodgepodge -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ~digs who wrote (630)7/15/2003 1:32:26 AM
From: ~digs  Respond to of 6763
 
GPS implications ; fastcompany.com

In 10 years, GPS has quietly become an indispensable tool across the U.S. economy. Truckers use it, of course, as do fishermen, hikers, and surveyors. But so do the terrestrial- and cellular-phone networks. Power companies and farmers use GPS, as do archaeologists, the Buffalo Bills, police departments, school districts, and concrete companies. NASA uses GPS to navigate spacecraft, construction firms use it to navigate bulldozers, and several big seaports use it to guide robotic cranes that load and unload shipping containers. Wall Street banks and brokerage houses depend on the satellites more than they depend on CNBC.

And the technology is just taking hold. It's predicted that, in 2003, just as many GPS devices of all kinds will be produced as in the previous 25 years that the satellites have been in orbit -- and that, in 2004, the number of devices will double again.